Spoiler Photos of Last "Harry Potter" Scene

A Brazilian "Harry Potter" site was able to snap a few photos from the set of "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows," showing shots of the cast from the very last scene of the franchise.

SPOILERS AHEAD:

The final scene is set nineteen years after the events of the last book and finds Harry, Ron, Hermione and Ginny taking their own children to Platform 9 3/4 to attend Hogwarts.

The characters have to look much older, which is where the use of prosthetics and CGI comes in. Check out the images below, which show what the older cast will look like and what they had to do to avoid having the paparazzi take any photos of them.

Im ashamed to say it, but I have enjoyed the Harry Potter films. In fact, I have a soft spot for films depicting a young man destined for great or evil things. Probably why Anakin Skywalker is my favorite movie character. Twilight doesnt have sh*t on Harry Potter, production wise or by dialogue.

But I must say, Im quite impressed by the Harry Potter-series. I've watched all six films, which are clocking in on roughly 15h, and during this time there's no character development. 15h and the only thing changing is when they hit puberty, which I really don't count as a "development".

I for one do not have mangina, nor have I ever alluded to the fact that I might. Be that as it is, the Harry Potter films are extremely well made, and include a highly talented cast. Twilight films have sh*tty dialogue, and count on attendance by the lowest common denominator.

Not even watching this... unless I hear that Emma is taking a huge dump on a glass table with camera underneath... then she, Harry and loser Ron engaging in muddy, nasty scat love-making (ok... f*cking... ok, raping) of said Emma.

Note - I do NOT condone rape (unless it involves Emma Watson... and me).

The first four movies were not perfect, but fun movies at least. Last two were terribly boring, and I blame it on David Yates' narrating skills, cause they visually look very good. The fact that he's back behind the camera, doesn't get my hopes very high for this last installment.

I have to admit they make the girl who plays Ginny really look thirty. I didn't get a good glimpse of Dan's face the much but it looked good from what I saw. Fact is the Harry Potter films have always been about quality over quantity and substance over style. I really believe they will make the final scene look really good.

@Sleuth: I really must disagree with you there. If it would've been quality over quantity, there's no excuse why we can't get any character development from six movies and 15h. No excuses at all. As I previously said, I ain't counting puberty. I know that the novels is thick as bricks and it's hard to translate that much, but still, they gotta give us something?

And substance over style? Where's the substance? I haven't found anything.

@Freudian_Nightmare
It's called subtext man. Not everything is right there for everyone to see. Not to mention, at this point, it is die hard Harry Potter fans who have read the books (Which is pretty much everyone at this point LOL). If it weren't substance over style the 6th Harry Potter would have been all fight scenes. You make these declarations about how there isn't any substance or quality, yet you give no examples. I believe a couple people on this site have complained about such things. Don't talk crap without giving some proof to back it up.

@Sleuth: It's quite ok dude, anger it's just healthy sometimes. And maybe I should have featured more points to prove my statement, but so should you.

I do think my point on character development was a very good proof of no substance, but there's more examples. You say it would be more fights in the 6th in that case, but style is not just about fights. Everytime they linger on a shot or scene, like when they fly on their broomsticks, that doesn't give the film any substance. That is just to please the audience with some "nice" set pieces (I put "nice" in quotation because those scenes looks quite bad). And this repeats itself time after time. I have not read the books, and nor will I, but I'm guessing that the movies aren't that far off (even though some changes are necessary sometimes). Not daring to stray away from the originalsource and make something of its own, is to me, copying of style. They cram in certain plotpoints and events that should've been changed, for the sake of working better in movieform, just to please the audience (that seems to be a recurring theme).

@Freudian_Nightmare
I see, well you are right that some shots like broom flying lingered, but I definitely have to disagree with sticking to the book. The 6th film changed a lot from the book so as to blend well into the last set of Harry Potter films. Also, in all fairness, the lingering flying shots do give off a sense of wonder for the audience. The movie is about a wizarding world and so these shots are necessary to round out the edges of that concept. Still, I even remember interviews where certain consistencies such as the Quidditch matches were toned down in each movie so as to focus more on the story of the characters and also, since we are now at 6 films, to not drag out a familiar concept. The last movie hardly showed the Quidditch match and what they did show was to signify Ron's change from sidekick to fellow player of Harry and to set up why that girl is obsessed with Ron which further leads into Hermoines jealousy. Now that was just the romantic element of one plotpoint and it coincided with why Harry spent more time with Dumbledore and explored how to defeat Voldemort since his friends were busy hating each other. Just saying, the storylines are many, but they work well together to feed the story.